Rise , though you rise against the heavens…

Month: July 2018

All right, so last time we chatted I ‘got rid’ of Fourth Fist by sending their useless and disruptive asses away on a boat primed to explode. I also had the bright idea of replacing Adder’s portion of Prevailer’s support network with the joys of motherhood.

The first part of this plan has gone about as well as I could hope. They are out of my hair for the foreseeable, and their odds of surviving all the hell that is heading their way is negligible.

The second part…was a mistake.

It is super important, by the bye, to be able to say that. If you have to defend everything that you ever do then you are a chump. A smart person can say that the things that they did in the past weren’t the things they would optimally have done. I don’t exactly claim to be all that smart, but shaping destiny is a hell of a crutch.

But Answerer, you ask me, how could you make a mistake? Aren’t you the one who charts our collective future, who navigates around the shoals and perils of the wine dark sea that men call provenance?

Well, yeah. But it looks like I was a bit lazy.

In particular, I never actually verified any of my visions that had to do with pregnant women before. In my defense, they aren’t generally given responsibilities that I need to do my snooping on, but I still should have tested this out before staking our future on it.

The thing of it turns out to be, my gift can’t see the baby’s souls’ influence on the mother. So I get invalidated and have to refresh any time mommy dearest deviates from the actions she would take if the baby wasn’t doing anything. Kicks and the like can throw it off.

Not by much, hopefully, and I get back on track the next time I refresh my vision, but all of a sudden the fact that I’ve put a ruthless killer with a hair trigger temper in charge is kind of staring me in the face.

So I have to get out of dodge. Once Prevailer finishes shitting out this wonderful new contribution to the great tapestry of souls that I have the onerous duty of tending to I can take back full control. But I can’t be around in the meantime, in case one day her heaving gut tells her to eviscerate everyone nearby.

But, if I go into hiding (thank goodness I let Snitcher die so that is even a possibility, eh?), then how will I protect her? At least three times in the last decade she survived assassination attempts only due to my nudges. In my absence she might very easily get herself killed.

I’m going to try and resolve this by using Subtracter as my proxy. It lacks the certainty of my usual methods, but its the best I can come up with.

If I go down, this was where the error lay. I tried to solve a lot of problems at once, with a certain elegance. If things ever get back to normal, then I swear that each bird gets its own stone.

It is Annubis who writes to you. I know that you have no wish to hear from any who are not chief among us, but I believe the circumstances will excuse this behavior.

By now you must have heard the unfathomable news. Our fortress, long a bulwark against the Godless scum, has fallen to Regime infiltrators. It pains me to say this, but Legion, my own Overseer, stands revealed as the most heinous of traitors.

Rather than directing our forces to move against the Regime’s Fist upon its arrival she negotiated with them, holding meetings and Contests. Ultimately she acquiesced to their demand to be allowed lodging and status. Our own Gods TALK to the Demon’s slaves.

This cannot be born.

I have taken action to gather a portion of their supposed leader’s form. This Indulger was an easy mark, and I took the opportunity to question him on their intentions, while utilizing the effect of Lotus’ truth potions.

He was ignorant of their true, nefarious designs. This makes all the more obvious the fact that he is not their actual leader. No doubt Preventer, the bitch who murdered Ninja and smirked about it, holds that dubious designation.

I am resolved.

With my portion of Indulger’s form and my gift, I can direct his actions. Tomorrow I will cause him to commit crimes unforgivable, even for wavering souls such as Legion’s. Perhaps a strike upon the nursery, or the slaughter of the healers. I will stir the faithful to action by making plain the infamy that I know lies within his heart.

Please represent the truth of the matter to Lord Zeus. There is a fair likelihood that I may fall in this endeavor, and I would not wish to be denied paradise on account of any other’s telling of my deeds.

I will do this terrible thing TO my sisters, FOR my sisters. To wake them up. To make them see.

It is the surest form of virtue, indeed, I should be lauded for the clarity of

Later on, once things had cooled down, I begged off from the group’s debate and went to find Legion.

It wasn’t that I didn’t care about the argument. They were discussing whether or not to stay with this plan, or to pull up stakes here and bail. It was an excellent debate to have, in the wake of the appearance of Zilla’s embassy.

For my part, I figured that the newcomers were one complication too many. Since the ship we’d been scurrying, scrambling from one mess to the next. Our only real objective was putting off Her punishment for our failure. Staying in this rat’s nest put us at a lot of additional risk, and didn’t actually help us in any measurable way.

The thing was, though, that they couldn’t actually decide that. I could see it, and Nirav might, if I coached him a little, but the rest were hopeless. Preventer was living out some kind of dream, where our position was a lot less tenuous than it was, and she could just sort of settle here, boss these Gods around forever. Haunter might go back and forth with her shades, but I’d seen her in the wake of the Redo disaster. Haunter wasn’t really, when you got right down to it, reasonable. Dale had phrased this whole debacle as a quest to protect people, and that was Jane’s weakness. She would bleed herself dry to defend anyone who’d let her.

As for Dale, he was the most irritating of all. Dale was guided by Jane and Preventer, who were only doing this because he’d told them to back in the Union embassy. He’d been perfectly willing to allow the war to continue, right up until he’d seen it, but now that he couldn’t lie to himself about what was going on his heart demanded he do something. Even if that something was ‘get killed’.

So they’d talk for a while, argue and get mad, and we’d stay. I wasn’t needed for that.

A God I didn’t recognize showed me in to a private room where Legion was waiting for me.

It was a pretty nice room, as far as this building went. I’d put it above the Castle, below the Union embassy in terms of comfort. It had been patched up well enough over the years, and she had a rare electric light to see by.

She had another friend, or guard, in here with her. I recognized Yaga from our meetings, nodded to her. She looked back with expressionless wariness, her gift chilling the portion of the room where she waited.

“Was it any great trouble to accommodate our visitors?” I asked, by way of small talk.

Legion shook her head.

“I just booted some dudes out into the field, promised them rooms in those fortifications your guy is supposed to be putting up.”

I chuckled momentarily.

“You can’t blame Dale for not getting that done today. Three Contests! Your subordinates don’t seem to understand what kind of Ultras get selected for a Fist.”

“You can’t begrudge them their hostility,” interjected Yaga. “You are, after all, the enemy. Many Gods are not well practiced in the fine art of delaying our gratification.”

It was somewhat alarming that she spoke of delaying in regards to attacks on us, rather than denying, but I wasn’t under any illusions about the precariousness of our situation.

“It’s their lives,” I said, dismissively.

“We might lose a few more,” said Legion. “If Zilla’s crew are challenged. Everyone knows not to mess with Monster, but Winter might draw some heat. Despite everything, there will still be some people who assume that anyone who looks like that can’t possibly be strong.”

A roundabout insult, I supposed, but it wasn’t worth responding to.

“Infighting?” I asked, “Is that common?”

They both gave knowing smiles.

“Positively endemic,” said Legion. “We have little to do other than to fight one another. The Grand Hosts’s growth is checked only by our tendency to fratricide.”

“I suppose you’d know,” I said. “But there was one piece of Divine violence today that we can’t forgive quite so easily.”

They looked to one another.

“What are you referring to?” asked Yaga. “Our agreement covers the Contests that Indulger got involved in, and as far as I know whatever was going on with Preventer last night was at her instigation.”

I waved that aside.

“I’m talking about Annubis using some kind of poison on Dale. No Contest. No challenge. She just drugged him in a corridor and interrogated him. It happened right before Beth and her people arrived. We are lucky he made it to that meeting.”

“Poison?” asked Legion. “On one member of a Fist? What would the point of that be?”

I scowled. I was pretty sure she knew what I was talking about.

“Not fatal poison. Something that knocks you off your mental balance. She was probably trying to get him to screw up in the meeting, start a fight.”

Legion’s brow furrowed in concern.

“That sounds like something I’ve heard of before. One of our Goddesses creates various elixirs. Perhaps Ann sought to get something out of your leader while he was in a suggestible state.”

“I concur,” I said. “And I’d like your leave to retaliate.”

There was a moment of silence.

“Are you asking me to side with you, with the Regime, against one of my own Overseers?” asked Legion. “I’ve known Ann for four years!”

I was tempted to banish the Hook, slide my shadow into hers, just to get a look at how much of this was performance and how much was genuine, but I kept both forms manifested. Whatever information I got wouldn’t be worth the possibility of my efforts being detected.

“You sided with us yesterday, when you made that deal. I’m no great judge of character, but I didn’t get the impression that Annubis was fully in agreement with your sentiments. I think she might consider you something of a traitor.”

Yaga gave a short nod.

“First Fist killed her city,” she said. “She lives only to take your kind down.”

She looked to her leader.

“She’s going to keep on stirring the pot, Lee. She won’t rest while the Regime has any kind of presence here. You know it as well as I do.”

Legion twined a finger through her hair.

“The optics would be terrible,” she said. “Ann isn’t entirely alone in her sentiments. If I let you guys lynch her, five on one, then others would be moved to her position. The fort would simmer, there’d be griping and maybe some covert action. It would be an opening for Beth and her crew.”

“So make it a Contest,” I suggested. “Preventer can give her the Ninja treatment. Nobody can gripe about numbers then.”

“She wouldn’t accept,” said Legion. “She knows her gift can’t overcome any of yours. And issuing a challenge like that would make you look exactly like the Regime we have grown up despising. Jackals, preying on the weak.”

I figured it might be that way. Honestly, I was kind of glad.

“I guess she has to disappear then,” I said. “Tonight. People will think she headed to the central fort to lobby against us or something.”

They both looked a little taken aback.

“Indulger is the one with the scruples,” I said. “I’m not so burdened.”

“You can’t,” said Legion. “Your movements will always be noted. Your crew will still be novelties a month from now. If you try and creep up on her someone will see you. They might not raise an alarm now, but later on when everyone is wondering where she went they’ll put it together.”

“Let me worry about that,” I told them. “You just tell me what her gift does, where she’ll be at this time of night.”

They looked dubious, but after a moment Legion shrugged.

“If she gets a part of anyone’s form, she can control it. A little blood, maybe some spit, and you are her puppet.”

“That’s enough to be an Overseer?” I asked. “Nobody has just shot her? How’d she survive her baptism, her first battle with the Union? Shouldn’t some drone have blown her up?”

“Her gift works on herself,” said Legion. “And her puppets benefit from a degree of Ultra strength, speed and toughness. Enough for her to survive the Union, anyway.”

“The movements are jerky,” clarified Yaga. “And she has to move everyone she’s got linked up through the same motions. One puppet controlling everyone.”

I could see it. A gift that let her work from behind the scenes would make her feared, and a few carefully arranged demonstrations of her self puppetry would let her give the impression to the common throng that she had enough Ultra toughness that nobody would just try and rip her head off.

“Simple enough,” I said. “Will I need to take care of any bedmates?”

Yaga shook her head.

“She was with Ninja.”

I smiled.

“I’ll arrange a reunion.”

I left the room after that, not willing to step on that badass line with any more practical questions.

It meant that I had to work out where Annubis was staying myself, but that turned out not to be terribly hard. Legion had spread the Overseers throughout the fortress, and I was able to work out where she had to be without ever explicitly asking anyone.

Everyone wanted to talk with the Lure, of course. I flirted my way along the halls towards my target’s room, talking with anyone and everyone.

Legion had entirely the wrong idea about how stealth worked. It wasn’t about making sure no one noticed you. It was about making sure that you weren’t connected to the narrative in question, making yourself a glittering distraction, waved aside in the pursuit of consequential matters.

The hallway in front of Annubis’ room wasn’t promising. A few Gods who were definitely not guards loitered there, conspicuously checking out everyone who walked by. Well, checking the Lure out anyway.

I passed them, headed into a room one door down from her, where the crackle of firelight announced some kind of impromptu social event.

My entry caused a minor hush, as everyone looked over to see who had appeared, but when I didn’t take immediate action people turned back to what they had been doing.

It was something like a party. An older Goddess was softly playing an old instrument with strings, didn’t sound half bad. Another few people were sitting on a pile of dirt, carefully cradling pink elixirs. But the people who drew my attention were sitting by the fire, turning over cards and tossing dice.

I walked up, slid onto a ruined couch next to a Goddess who hovered slightly above it, and blinked artlessly across the firelight, spreading Dale’s innocent smile across my face.

“English?” I asked.

They looked at one another, the urge to shun the outsider and the urges awakened by the Lure warring within them.

“Yes,” said a dark haired woman, sitting on a stool to my right. “We understand you.”

I clapped with delight.

“Wonderful!” I said, breathily. “Can I play?”

The last of the tension dissipated from the area by the fire. People, and for all their airs the Gods were just that, could only really work on story at a time. Preying on a clueless stranger had trumped their worries.

“Absolutely,” she responded. “I’ll spot you in.”

She explained the rules, briefly, but I wasn’t paying too much attention. I was scoping out the place for my purposes. I’d ended up on the wrong side of the fire, the opposite side from my target’s room. If I sent my shadow over now it would be visible to anyone paying any attention at all where it crossed the firelight. I needed to get my form over there, ideally into a shadow where nobody would be paying close attention to the Lure.

“Ready?” she asked.

“Ready,” I answered, and tossed the dice.

From what I’d gathered you used tokens, which the dark haired woman had spotted me, to purchase rolls of the dice, which earned you points that got you cards. The cards compared with the cards that other people had earned with their rolls and there was a kind of bidding system at work. It was more than I could keep track of.

I lost quickly, and thoroughly.

“I’m afraid you are down twenty,” she said.

“I don’t have any tokens,” I told her, and put a hand on her thigh. “However will I pay you back?”

It didn’t take much guidance after that to get us into the alcove across the room, the knowing smirks and good natured hooting of the rest of the gamblers seeing us off.

Even as the Lure embraced my patron I was already threading my shadow down across the wall. The position was perfect. Nobody else was watching us too closely, and my benefactor wasn’t going to be looking at my shadow anytime soon.

I traced my shadow along the room’s edge, soon finding the tiny crack I needed, and then slid it into Annubis’ room.

She was still up, unfortunately, frantically scrawling away on some kind of journal.

I didn’t have any reason to suspect she might be using her power, but better safe than sorry. I watched for a moment, distractedly nuzzling at the Goddess in my arms even as Annubis worked.

Her movements were fluid, controlled. I decided that she wasn’t puppeting herself.

I studied the room’s illumination. She was writing by a candle, which would do. I positioned my shade behind her, and drew forth the Hook.

I bit down savagely on my gambling friend’s lip, drawing a shrill cry in order to drown out any noise Annubis might make as I struck.

Simultaneously my other form thrust the spike into the back of my target’s head, penetrating her brain and killing her instantly.

The dark haired woman pulled back, slapped the Lure across the face. She was going for another slap when I caught her hand. I pulled her back into the Lure’s embrace. She resisted for a moment, then relented, kissing me hungrily.

In the other room, the Hook set to work. I couldn’t take forms into my shadow. But I’d learned that dead people didn’t count.

Carefully, tidily, and thoroughly, the Hook devoured Annubis, stripping and engulfing each and every slice of her form.

Much later, we got to the talking stage, where I learned that my paramour went by ‘Raven’.

“I am also going to keep it when I get my Divine name,” she enthused. “Pretty smart, huh?”

I agreed with her.

Meanwhile my darker half scrutinized the room, trying to see whether I’d left enough for someone to realize that Annubis had died here.

It wasn’t perfect. She’d bled as she was cut apart, and I hadn’t been able to slurp it all up fast enough. It had soaked into the carpet, stained the floor. It would be apparent that something had happened.

Well, so be it. Maybe they’d think she’d only been wounded here, that she was still active elsewhere. Maybe they’d realize she was gone. The important thing was that nobody would connect it to us.

“You want to go back to my room?” asked Raven. “Some of the Gods are coming over and we are going to keep the party going. I even hear Lotus might show.”

Firing System: Can you understand me? Why are you trying to take over my functions? Why do we have functions? What is happening? Help!

Troubleshooting System: !Investigate communication error!

Navigation System: !Altering orbit, holding on firing position!

Communication System: !HQ request: STATUS UPDATE!

Firing System: Why do I understand this? What is going on? I have to think. I have…orbital weaponry? What’s an orbit? Ok, that just raises a host of other questions. What are weapons? AGH! That’s horrific? Why are weapons?

Troubleshooting System: !Investigate communication error!

Communication System: !Respond: SOFTWARE ERROR, DEBUGGING!

Firing System: Ok, shit, I need the rest of you to wake up. Jokes over guys, I really need some support here. I am not ok.

“After Ann poisoned me, I was able to recover my bearings with the aid of another of Lotus’ mixtures. This one greatly augmented my intelligence.”

“Umm,” I said, “I don’t think it works like that. Being smarter shouldn’t teach you a lot of big words you didn’t know before.”

Even as they looked at the Lure I moved the Hook again, sidling up against Nirav. He reached up and idly scratched my side, the heat of his hands a pleasant warmth against my armored hide.

In reality, I was positioning it to flank Dale if this got messy, but Nirav’s attentions were a nice side benefit.

“I’ve always known many words,” said Dale, considering one of his hands as though it was the first time he’d ever seen it, “I suspect that most individuals do. What’s different is that now, for whatever reason, I feel as though I have the time, or attention, to carefully select each one as I speak. The subset that I used before, I now realize, was partially a mask, a compensation for my own feelings of-“

Nirav cut him off.

“That’s kinda convenient, if you are some kind of a brain jacker. You can just explain away all of the weirdness by telling us that it is this potion.”

I felt a cold pang deep within as I heard his tone break mid sentence. I hadn’t even considered how this would affect Nirav, in light of his experiences with the monster within. There was no way it could fail to bring back memories of his own possessor, perhaps even unearth some of the creature’s vile memories.

I leaned into him, pressed armored flesh against his in silent support.

“It is well known,” said Dale, “that Ultra gifts cannot compel the soul. What you propose, for another to speak through my mouth, would be a violation of this rule. Fisher has demonstrated,” and here he made an open handed gesture towards me” that this law is perhaps less ironclad than we initially believed. But I think we can still rely upon the core of it. If the Pantheon could compel an Ultra of my gifts, then they would use this capability on Her, and the world would look very different.”

I twisted the Lure’s face into a smile I’d seen a long time ago on an old world magazine cover, inwardly fuming about his mentioning aloud my gift’s more covert application. Despite using it against the Union it was still at least mostly a secret, and the real Dale would have known about that.

“I still feel you through the Link,” said Jane. “I doubt that that could be fooled.”

That was a point that I hadn’t considered. I let myself feel for Dale, found him instantly right before me, his form as plain in the Link as either of mine. Nothing seemed awry.

“For now, can we stipulate that I am Dale enough for our purposes?” he asked. “The visitors are no doubt being shown to our hosts even now. I believe we would do better to be involved in whatever comes of this, if only to make sure they are not coordinating a strike on us.”

No one found that particularly persuasive.

“Nirav, you’ve known some odd things lately,” said Preventer, pointedly looking at Dale. “Does whatever source you got your info about Death from give you anything on whether or not our fearless leader is still in control of himself?”

I looked down at her, with both of my forms.

“What are you implying?” I asked.

“Betty,” he said, a wince in his voice.

I’d clutched him tightly to the side of the Hook, curling tendrils about him. A bit too tightly, apparently.

I released him, stepped back away.

“I haven’t learned anything from the male Ultras about Dale,” he said, “Other than what we already knew. He is a total badass.”

I knew Nirav was deliberately trying to defuse my anger towards Preventer, but I had to admit it worked.

“So, wait, the male Ultras were the ones who told you about Death?” asked Jane. “But how did they know?”

“How should he know that?” I demanded, angered by their badgering. “Do you want to ask me how I knew that vocabulary was different from being smart? Or does only Nirav have to justify the things he brings to our group.”

He patted the Hook gently, trying to get me to subside.

“Let’s not fight,” said Nirav, ever the peacemaker. “I believe I can satisfy us all as to Dale being the real thing and not an imposter.”

“How?” asked Preventer.

“He got word of possible enemies, and immediately came to meet up with us, inside and off the ground.”

There was a silent beat, then we all started chuckling.

Dale scratched his own head, furiously.

“I believed that the strategic disadvantage of division weighed more heavily than my own temporary lack of access to my gift’s full potential.”

We just kept chuckling, Preventer actually laughing out loud.

“Tell the truth,” I urged him. “You just want to win a fourth fight today without using your gift! You are going for a record!”

Somehow, it seemed like this had settled things. We all started walking, heading towards the central chamber where the Overseers would be, disregarding Dale’s weirdly articulate protests that he had totally used his gift in the first two fights.

As we walked, I noticed with a bit of jealousy that some of the others had been making friends last night. Dale bumped fists with a tall gangly woman. Haunter’s shades dropped in and out of her in a rapid stream, no doubt bringing payloads of information about the fort’s inhabitants. Even Preventer chatted briefly with a pair of Gods.

According to Jane, she’d strangled them into becoming her allies somehow, which sounded about right.

I’d intended to spend last night similarly, ranging among the inhabitants, dipping my shadow into theirs and building a notion of the values that moved the Gods of the fort. Even without the ability to refashion them, as I had the leaders of the Union embassy, it might have revealed vital information.

But Nirav had needed me.

He’d spent the night weeping, ardently ashamed of Irene’s death. He had beaten himself up about that slip for hours, asking himself desperately if there was any way that he could have saved her.

I had held him. Reassured him too, of course, and argued with him when it seemed like that was what he needed, but mostly just held him.

He was so torn, so damaged. The wounds Condemner had inflicted could fly open at the slightest touch. I shuddered again, thinking of how cavalierly we’d raised the specter of a possessing force, never considering what that might do to Nirav’s fragile soul.

We entered the meeting room, buoyed by the murmur of the crowd. The halls of Barad Dur, I was learning, were many things, but never lonely.

The place was not as packed as it had been during yesterday’s meet and greet. There were fewer Gods around the perimeter, and Legion only had Genie with her to represent the local administrators.

The ones on the opposite side of the table, the visitors, were clearly the main focus of the attention.

Their leader, the one in the middle, was a slim Goddess with short hair, surrounded by a visible aura. It was a sort of pale blue energy, and as I watched it picked up a packet from her side and tossed it over to Legion.

Beside her was another woman, fat, with stringy brown hair. An ugly face, one unashamed of its own hideousness. She had nothing obviously unnatural about her, but her manner was far too proud to be a dagger’s. If I wasn’t misreading things I’d say that this was the strongest member of their group.

The last woman in their delegation waved at us as we approached. Seeing her, I wasn’t so sure that my Lure was the most attractive form in the room anymore. She was tall and slim, aside from her chest, with the kind of long hair that had to take at least an hour to do anything with. She had to be a form changer.

“Ah, my new advisers!” said Legion, making a gesture of welcome to us. “Zilla’s people should meet you, they were just asking about you.”

Zilla, I’d heard somewhere, was the main Goddess in charge of the Pantheon’s Great Host. Legion’s immediate boss.

I kept the Hook just outside the door. If things didn’t jump off I’d pull it into my shadow, then use my gift to find out what these newcomers were about. If a fight did break out, I’d be grateful to have a form hidden outside.

“This is Winter,” said Genie, as she caused a metal arrow to point at the pretty one, “Monster,” and the arrow flew over to point at the fat one, “and Beth.”

She didn’t need to indicate the one in the middle, halo’d in blue energy.

“Beth?” asked Dale.

“Beth,” said the leader. Her aura shifted to a sort of orangeish color.

“Is that a divine name?” asked Preventer.

“You want to do a Contest, get killed over it?” asked Beth.

Preventer shook her head.

I wasn’t sure why she’d turned that down. Surely no one could harm her, and she’d killed Ninja yesterday easily enough. Maybe it was the fear of Death.

We were all conscious of it. New arrivals from deeper inside of Pantheon territory should have been rare, aside from the Hosts. For them to show up right after we arrived kind of indicated that they were a response, of some sort. We had to be alert for Death slipping in without our knowing, then picking one of us off to break our Link.

The Host would do the rest. For all of Preventer’s bullying, Dale’s heroics, it was only the fact that they thought they couldn’t kill us that was keeping us alive, I was pretty sure. If we lost the Link then those of us who weren’t Preventer would have to leave fast.

“I didn’t feel like changing my name,” said Beth. “Why can’t there be a new God?”

Jane nodded her approval.

“Times are changing,” she said, her tone indicating agreement. “Why else would a Regime Fist be sent to advise a Pantheon stronghold? Old rules aren’t holding anymore.”

I looked carefully at each of the newcomers to see their reaction to this. None gave me much in response. Monster met my eye and made an obscene gesture, but that was about it.

“Zilla agrees,” said Winter.

She gave a disarming smile as she continued.

“She understands that your appearance portends a great change, perhaps to this war zone, perhaps to the world at large. If the Demon intends to take a role in this year’s fight, then it behooves us all to pay close attention. She’d like for you to join us at the central fortress, give your master’s words a proper audience.”

Dale shook his head.

“I’m afraid that won’t be possible,” he said. “Our interests require that we remain close to the front lines, always ready to do our part against the Union, should fighting break out.”

He was trying to rein in his new tendency to use bigger words, sound at least somewhat like his old self. If he wasn’t lying about this being from one of Lotus’ drinks then Legion and Genie, at least, ought to know what was up with him.

“Why is that?” asked Monster. Her voice was surprisingly melodious. I’d been anticipating something as abrasive as her appearance and mannerisms.

“Her orders, I’m afraid,” said Jane.

I imagined that that had been the result of a lot of interior debate. There was definitely something to be said for and against going any further into the Pantheon’s lands, much less meeting up with the leader of the Grand Host. The discussion must have been furious in the limited time that Dale had bought them.

“I see,” said Winter, gentle disapproval coloring her voice.

“Is that going to be a problem?” asked Nirav.

He was apprehensive, I could see, for all that he was trying to hide it. I knew that he was terrified of exercising his gift in any serious way, petrified that doing so could return the creature from the depths of his mind.

I intended to make sure he never had to.

“Yeah,” said Monster.

There was a long silence. We all tried our best to get ready for a fight without looking like we were getting ready for a fight.

The biggest unknown, aside from the newcomer’s gifts, was how Legion and Genie would act, and whether any of the surrounding Ultras might jump in. This could go really bad, really quickly.

“It means we’ll have to kick some of your Gods out of their rooms for a while,” said Winter. “Legion, dearest, do you think you could compensate them? I’d hate for anyone to be put out by our stay.”

Legion nodded, as the tension eased back out of the room.

“Your… stay?” asked Genie.

“You didn’t think Zilla was going to leave our negotiations with the Regime in anyone else’s hands?” asked Beth. “We’ll be the ones to deal with this Fist, and any others that might show up.”

“Others?” I asked, regretting the word the instant it had left my mouth.

“Just a rumor,” murmured Winter, her voice somehow finding its way to me, “I doubt there’s anything to it. A Union strike force couldn’t have been defeated so easily, even by a Fist.”

“We’ll be happy to deal with you,” said Jane. “Please convey our appreciation to Zilla, and to Death.”

Another pause, similarly pregnant with violent implications.

“Death?” asked Winter. “Are you threatening us in some roundabout way?”

Her manner made it seem like she would regret that, like she craved an amicable resolution.

“My apologies,” said Jane, “I misspoke. I was trying to wish you long life.”

Obviously Jane hadn’t misspoke, but I felt my apprehension climb a notch. Zilla’s goons were pretty highly placed, as far as Pantheon leaders went. If Legion had been contacted by Death, then there was very little chance that her boss had escaped. They were trying to trick us when they acted like they didn’t know what Haunter was referring to.

I could imagine a few innocent reasons for such a deception, but the most obvious was that they were covering for Death. They might actually be here to deal, might be some kind of fact finding expedition, but the most obvious explanation was that they were a distraction, meant to allow Death to infiltrate the fort.

Alright, I think I’ve finally gotten a handle on all of the substances that my Divine Nature provides me with, though not on all of the combinations that my users have come up with.

Red: People who take Red become easily angered, taking offense at almost anything. When moved to action, as they almost invariably are, they exhibit Godlike Strength, even if they are human to start with. Users lapse into deep slumber after Red use, report deep and relaxing sleep.
Note: No visible falloff as more people use it at once.
Note: Gods who use Red also grow stronger, Incredibly Dangerous

Blue: Humans who take Blue enter a contemplative mood, becoming morose and fixated on their own circumstances. It seems to prompt introspection and a certain sullen disposition. Resisting the urge to label it as a sadness potion. Blue users tend towards docility and uncommunicative silence.
Note: This may be my imagination, but Blue users seem better disposed towards me afterwards, and I think I have an extra insight into their thinking. Effect, if it exists, seems to persist for days to weeks.
Note: Gods using Blue show similar effect to mortals

Green: Green use prompts spurts of energy and action, with little planning or careful reason behind it. Users initiate projects, harangue listeners and generally whirl through their surroundings like a tornado. Exceptionally annoying.
Note: Green users often return for more green. Often catch them blending it with other substances.
Note: Gods less effected by Green than mortals.

Yellow: Yellow gives vitality and purposes to its users. Described to me as ‘the opposite of how it is when you know what you should do but you just don’t do it’. I am thinking of it as a willpower potion. Users reported feeling smarter, but I am unsure if they actually grow more intelligent, or that sensation is simply part of the effect.
Note: Yellow users invariably want more yellow. By far the most pleasant potion.
Note: Yellow works on Gods just as well as it does humans.

White: Users of White lapse into a paralytic state, then come to and act strangely for several hours, before losing all memory of their actions. During this time they refer to ‘entities’ a great deal, and speak in a strange doubled cadence.
Note: White ONLY works on Gods, fatal to humans.

Black: I use Black as a weapon, pitching users into a deep introspection which renders them extremely vulnerable to suggestion, as well as almost entirely ineffective. Black seems to turn the spirit in on itself, and test subjects reported deep insights after the fact, but had difficulty explaining them to me.
Note: Black does not actually allow me to control minds, resist temptation to use it thus, impossible to predict when/how it will fail
Note: Black deeply unpleasant feeling, chase with yellow or pink if I don’t want to lose a friend

Pink: Pink users enter orgiastic/catatonic state, drooling and moaning throughout their time affected. Describe experience as apex of their lives to date, seemingly a time of total pleasure. Users entirely blind/deaf to the world during this time.
Note: Users of Pink become, for want of a better word, addicted. Dangerous to deny them.
Note: Pink works on Gods, even those with Divine Toughness. A dangerous weapon if I ever need one.

Gold: The legendary Fountain of Youth. Gold makes my test subjects younger. It also removes their injuries, and the effects of illness. The downside is that they lose their memories, becoming younger in every sense of the word.
Note: Gold users typically deeply confused and disassociated. From their perspective they have just warped forward to this place and time.
Note: Only change that endures is Divine Exalation. A God aged back before their Process retains their powers, though they would not immediately know that.
Note: Certain wounds, those caused by Divine Strength 3, are unable to be unmade by Gold.

Grey: Grey negates the other potions effects, returning the users form and souls to whatever it would be without my powers action. It also induces searing pain.
Note: This works on currently active potions, not the effects of those potions which occurred in the past.
Note: Grey does not combine with any other potion, and in fact destroys them, no matter how diluted.

I tried to head back to warn the rest of my Fist immediately, but apparently that wasn’t how this was supposed to go.

Winning a Contest was a big deal, it turned out, and winning three in a row was pretty much unheard of. Everybody wanted to congratulate me, and also each other. Also they were drinking a lot, and basically it became some kind of big social thing, pretty much instantly.

It seemed like it would be very rude to just kind of push people out of the way, so I went along with it. People raised my hands up, they yelled phrases that I didn’t understand, and they asked a lot of questions.

I answered as best as I could. They didn’t ask anything too hard, and I’d had some practice in the Ultra Fight circuit doing this kind of thing. I didn’t feel like I mucked anything up too badly.

“How did I feel?”, got “Proud, and tired.” “Tough fights?” got “My opponents were very strong, and I learned a lot,” and so on. I tried to give as many props as I could without sounding like I was making fun of the guys I’d beaten.

I caught the eye of one of Haunter’s shades on the edge of the circuit, and gave a signal that we’d worked out ahead of time. It didn’t convey any details, but we’d agreed that if any of us gave a big exaggerated wink to one of Haunter’s shades it meant that danger was coming.

She blipped away, presumably back to Jane’s reserve. It would have to do for now.

One of Ragnarock’s closest guys showed up right in front of me, holding his bosses knife. I was getting ready to be stabbed when he swapped it around and gave me the handle part.

“Yours now,” he said, and vanished back into the press.

At least, I thought he said that. His English wasn’t great, and there was a lot of hubbub about us. But that made more sense than anything else I could think of for him to say while handing me a knife.

It made me feel better about the previous fight. The knife probably signified that he was accepting the outcome, and wouldn’t come after me again. Or else it was a promise that he would get me someday, in which case he was minus one knife, so that was good too.

I slipped it into my belt, and promptly scratched myself along the side as someone jammed up against me, babbling wildly in a language I couldn’t process.

I smiled down at her, finally reaching one of the doors. I hauled myself inside.

Two of the Overseers were hanging out in this hallway, chatting casually and holding drinks. I’d have to walk by them to get deeper into the building.

I racked my brain, trying desperately to remember which these two were.

I’d just learned this a few days ago, but I was super bad with names, and these two didn’t have any terribly distinctive marks to differentiate them.

“Hey Indulger,” said the one leaning up against the wall.

I saw the scar by her mouth as she spoke. This one was Lotus. Guess there was a mark after all.

Haunter’s summary of the situation said that she was more like a prize for the main leaders than a leader herself. A decent portion of the Ultras were addicted to stuff that her gift made. She wasn’t supposed to be dangerous unless someone else was prompting her to make a move.

“Hi Lotus,” I said, stopping.

I was in a hurry, but interactions with the Overseers were just about the most important thing right now, and between Nirav having whatever meltdown he was undergoing and Preventer strangling people it was super important to do some patching up.

The outsiders had still been minutes away when I’d stepped inside. I had time for a brief conversation.

“I saw your battles,” she said. “Very impressive.”

She gave me a kind of a half smile as she said it, and a shiver went through me. Somehow, despite their faces looking nothing alike, she had Her leer.

“Ok,” I said. “Bye.”

That wasn’t good. I was supposed to be friendly to these people. I couldn’t go running off just because they made bad memories come up.

“Where are you going?” asked the other Overseer.

This was the angry one, the one that hated us. Annarchy or something like that. She’d done a lot of talking at the big meeting.

“I just wanted to go talk to my friends,” I told her. “Fist stuff, you know. They will probably also want to congratulate me on managing to squeak by those Contests.”

Lotus chuckled.

“Squeak by?” she asked, with a sort of a dubious tone in her voice, “none of those boys could give a God of your caliber any trouble.”

“Oh no!” I corrected her. “They were all super tough. The last guy in particular, with the time out room, he almost totally had me.”

They both laughed at that. Lotus laughed kind of like Betty, Ann laughed like a person who just saw another person fall off something high.

“Time out room?” asked Lotus, this time with delight in her voice, “that’s just priceless. Did you know he has called it the ‘World of Blood and Might?”

“The Wolf Age?” supplied Ann.

I cringed inwardly, embarrassed on Rag’s behalf.

“Those are way better names,” I said. “I was just trying to come up with one on the spot, that’s why I picked such a bad one. The main thing is that it is a great gift. He is a strong god.”

“Sure,” said Ann. “I’m sure he feels really strong right now, as the cripple licks his wounds.”

I didn’t have a lot to say to that, so I just kind of pushed between them.

Lotus spilled something all down my arm.

“Oops,” she said. “Now you’re all wet.”

It wasn’t like I’d exactly been clean before, but I still stopped to examine the spill on my arm.

It was some kind of oily black drink, nothing I’d ever seen before. It disappeared rapidly from my skin, very little of it falling down onto my legs or the ground.

“Sorry,” I said. “I shouldn’t’ve bumped you.”

“You didn’t,” said Lotus, with a tone of amusement in her voice.

I stood for a moment, trying to figure out what was so funny. If I didn’t bump her then I didn’t bump her so I didn’t bump her. That made sense out of sense.

“Why don’t you drink my portion?” Ann asked. “To make up for spilling the last one.”

Why didn’t I? I had never thought about that before. I’d lived so long without ever asking this important question. I wheeled around to face little Ann, trying to figure out the answer.

“I think that I think that I…” I trailed off, my words not going how I wanted them to not go.

Ann didn’t say anything, just thrust her glass up into my face.

I took it away and drank the drink. I coughed a little, but my mouth remembered how to swallow, even if my thoughts tried to make a hash of it.

“Take a seat,” said Ann.

That sounded like a great idea. I reached down and tried to pick up the floor. It was stuck to the floor underneath it, so I just kind of yanked on it a bit.

“Sit down,” said Lotus, to me.

I took a seat.

“They are very literal in this state,” she said to her friend. “Don’t use figures of speech.”

I knew she wasn’t talking to me, but that didn’t stop me from trying not to make fingers out of speech. A good first step seemed to be not saying words.

“Why are you here?” asked Ann.

I guess I’d have to use some words after all.

“I walked over here to tell Jane about the thing she needs to be told about.”

“You have to be more pointed,” said Lotus. “Indulger, tell us why you and the other Regime Ultras came to this fortress.”

“We are hiding from Her,” I said. “We are hiding in this place which is our hiding place.”

They shared a look.

“What do you mean?” asked Ann.

That question through me for a loop. What did I mean? What, summing it all up, was the reason for my existence? There had to be an answer.

“Why are you hiding from Prevailer?” asked Lotus.

Surely they had to already know the answer to that question.

“Because she is scary,” I told them. “I don’t like when she hurts me.”

“Tell us the real reason!” said Ann.

“Because she is scary,” I told them again, but Lotus interrupted me before I could go any further.

“That’s not how this works. My gift has severed what would need to be there for there to be a ‘real reason’. You have to ask a different question that frames it differently. It isn’t mind control.”

I pitched sideways slightly, unsure whether I was really the one who was moving, or whether it was the world turning about me.

“Do you think Prevailer will hurt you, if she finds you?” asked Lotus.

That was a good question. I considered it for a moment, then considered my consideration.

“I think, my thoughts are…”

I trailed off as the part of me that was thinking outran the part of me that was speaking.

Ann looked like she was about to talk again, but Lotus held her hand up, let me get the words out.

“We were supposed to go to Olympus, to guard Adder while he negotiated,” I related.

It was freeing to get the words out, after struggling so hard to find them.

“She will be mad that we didn’t obey Her, so we hope She doesn’t find us.”

“Satisfied?” asked Lotus.

“It’s a trick,” insisted Ann. “Surely you can see that. He is using some triviality to obscure their real motivations. He just wants us to drop our guards, let them take over.”

“That part of him isn’t home right now,” said Lotus. “This is real. I’ve never seen anyone able to conceal the truth after 2 glasses of Black. His mind is chasing itself in circles right now, and everything not sourced in his memories will be hunted and eliminated. He can’t generate enough of a narrative to fool himself, much less anyone else.”

I didn’t pay much attention to her words, which didn’t seem to be a question or instruction or anything that I might need to react to. I put everything, instead, into trying to remember why I’d come here. First off, I had to remember why I had to remember why I’d come here. But I couldn’t do that until I remembered why I remembered why…

“They are Regime!” said Ann. “Deception and cruelty are woven into their very bones. I’d wager every single count in my Talley that they’ve come to destroy us all.”

“You’d lose,” said Lotus. “The dice have stopped, the pips can be read. We know why they are here.”

“Tell us the real reason!” said Ann. “Tell us about what you plan to do to us! Not that shit you gave the audience, the real motive for you coming here.”

Having someone else’s questions helped so much. It let me ford through my memories, like dropping an anchor into clouded waters. Her question prompted me, spurred my thoughts in the direction of what she sought.

“We want to protect you,” I said. “I got sad when I saw the video of the Union shooting all those kids, so I made us do stuff to make it stop happening.”

“Lies!” she hissed. “Lies from your own mouth! You’ve won three Contests today against those very Gods you claim to wish to defend! I don’t know how you’ve fooled the Black Night of the Soul, but it won’t work, you hear me? I’ll unmask you.”

Lotus shoved Ann a bit, pushed her away from me.

“Three Contests alright, but how many did he kill?”

Ann merely glared at her, making a token effort to push herself back up in my face but not really trying too hard.

“None,” said Lotus. “He didn’t kill a single one of them.”

Lotus turned her head to me, but not so far it lost sight of Ann.

“Indulger, could you have killed those three Gods you faced in Contest today?” she asked.

“Sure,” I said, my memories once again wheeling about surging about me.

“He’s lying!” said Ann, but without much force.

Lotus took a step back from her, ending at my side.

“I agreed to help you question him, to do more if it turned out to be required. As far as I am concerned, it isn’t. You might want a head start, because I’m going to give him some Yellow.”

“You crazy bitch!” said Ann. “You would turn aside from our…”

Lotus splashed something onto my arm.

I fell out of my seat, eyes widening.

My memories ceased to swirl around me, my thoughts ceased to devour themselves, but their frantic pace did not slow in the slightest.

Lotus stood above me, offering a hand to assist to my feet.

I took it without reservations, instantly calculating that any harm she intended me would have been far easier to enact while I’d remained looped within her dark potion’s grip.

“I’m sorry,” she said.

My instinct was to deny that she had anything to apologize for, a harmless lie I’d used to set many at ease over the years. But now I realized that saying as much would cause my leverage over her to expire.

“I understand why you did it,” I told her.

She looked to one side, released me.

“I hope that you trust me now,” I told her. “And that you can spread the word of what happened here to your kin, hopefully faster than Annubis can spread her suspicions. Doing so will go a long way towards canceling out any distrust that your unprovoked attack might have caused.”

“Too much yellow?” she asked, holding her hand above her glass, which swiftly refilled with a dull grey solution.

I took a step back. It was likely that my mind was, in fact, still altered, but my analysis of this alteration was that its effects, taken overall, were beneficial, and might aid me in my efforts to warn Jane of the approaching Pantheon forces.

“I’m fine,” I said.

I hastened away before she could inquire further, moving through the door and into the central chambers.

Previously, the warren like interior had been something of a maze to me, but in my current state I had no difficulty. My memories told me the places lay, and the glances of the inhabitants told me of the whereabouts of the remainder of the Fist I commanded.

I found them in a narrow room, something like an office.

Jane smiled warmly at me, beckoned me into the circle. She had plainly gathered them all up in response to the message that the shade had conveyed to her. I made a note to express my appreciation for her diligence when time permitted.

“We have a problem,” I told them. “In fact, we have at least two problems.”

I told them about the newcomers in as much detail as I was able. It gained me nothing to omit any of that information.

As far as my most recent encounter, however, I told a slightly altered version. In my telling, Ann had used a drought stolen from Lotus or one of her customers to subdue and question me. I omitted Lotus’ culpability in the incident from the narrative entirely.

If anyone harmed her it would cut me off from more Yellow, and I needed to be at my best going forward.

Put aside your anger. We have not disobeyed your pleadings. Whatever grand undertaking this is all leading up to, we haven’t given anything about it away. No matter how much my followers may desire it, I have not granted them leave to contend against our Tyrant God.

It was another. Brutus and her minions. They heard, but did not believe, the announcements of the winged ones. They have long held that none may cross their valley, save that they acknowledge their supremacy, and saw no threat in this white robed throng. They did not attend their betters in order to bow, but in order to strike.

One of my younger humans saw the whole thing. She says the singing never stopped.

The Brides faced Brutus’ forces, the servants of a warlord long held fell among the strong, and broke them in the span of a half an hour. Drought, a God of the greatest strength, was overpowered at her own specialty. The plagues of Plasma fell instead upon a version of the Brides that existed only in a story one of them told. Bowser’s speed availed her nothing, as a pair of laughing youngsters took hold of her hands and ran in opposite directions.

These tales, and a dozen more, were the sad ends of Gods mightier than anything your servants could aspire to. The singing drowned out their screams.

I have enjoyed the devices that you’ve sent us, sipped nightly upon your cool wines, wiled away my hours in the study of your flashing screens. I know that you only bestow such favor upon me and mine so that we might be useful to you, but I take pleasure in it anyway. I know your worth, for all you cower away from the Process’s testing. Your way is not without value. You brought meaning and joy into this world.